Displaying items by tag: Joseph Kosinski
Criterion’s June has Sorcerer & Brazil in 4K, plus new WB, Imprint & boutique titles, KLSC’s Dante’s Peak & Daylight delayed, Sony bows a new UHD player & more!
We’ve got one more new disc review to round out the week here at The Bits this afternoon...
Dennis has taken a look at Robert Day’s Two-Way Stretch (1960) on Blu-ray from Kino Lorber Studio Classics, a classic heist caper starring Peter Sellers.
The big release news today is that our friends at The Criterion Collection have just announced their June slate, which is absolutely fantastic! Look for 4K Ultra HD upgrades of Terry Gilliam’s Brazil (1985) (Spine #51) and Paul Schrader’s Mishima: A Life in Four Chapters (1985) (Spine #432) on 6/3, followed by Sidney Lumet’s The Wiz (1978) (Spine #1264) in 4K UHD and Blu-ray on 6/10, Charlotte Zwerin’s Thelonious Monk Straight, No Chaser (1988) (Spine #1265) and Mitchell Leisen’s Midnight (1939) (Spine #1266) both on Blu-ray on 6/17, and François Girard’s Thirty Two Short Films About Glenn Gould (1993) (Spine #1268) and William Friedkin’s Sorcerer (1977) (Spine #1267) in 4K Ultra HD and Blu-ray on 6/24. Of these, Brazil, The Wiz, and Sorcerer will have Dolby Vision HDR. You can read more here and you can see the cover art for these above left and also below the break. [Read on here...]
- AppleTV+
- Jerry Bruckheimer
- Joseph Kosinski
- F1 (2025)
- Ted Lasso: Season Four
- Con Air 4K Digital
- Simon West
- Sony UBPX700/K 4K player
- Dante's Peak 4K
- Daylight 4K
- Breaking Glass (1980)
- Fun City Editions
- The Beyond 4K
- Lucio Fulci
- Grindhouse Releasing
- Directed by David Lean: Volume 1
- Film Focus: Carroll Baker
- Laurence Olivier’s Shakespeare Trilogy
- Via Vision Entertainment
- The Informant! 4K
- The Good German 4K
- Steven Soderbergh
- Sorcerer 4K
- William Friedkin
- Thirty Two Short Films About Glenn Gould 4K
- Midnight (1939)
- Thelonious Monk Straight No Chaser
- Paul Schrader
- Sidney Lumet
- The Wiz 4K
- Mishima: A Life in Four Chapters 4K
- Brazil 4K
- Terry Gilliam
- Dennis Seuling
- Two Way Stretch BD review
- Criterion June 2025 slate
- Kino Lorber Studio Classics
- Bluray Disc
- Back the Bits
- Support The Digital Bits via Patreon
- My Two Cents
- The Digital Bits
- Bill Hunt
- 4K Ultra HD
- Imprint Films
- The Criterion Collection
Cameron 4Ks pre-orders are finally live on Amazon, plus Stop Making Sense 4K pre-orders, new KLSC and Shout! titles & more!
There’s some good title announcement news to report today, including a long-awaited music release.
But first, we wanted to let you all know that the 3/12 James Cameron 4K titles—The Abyss (1989), True Lies (1994), and Aliens (1986)—are finally available for pre-order on Amazon. And while they currently show full price, the usual 30% off discount should be applied soon. (Anyone who pre-orders now will get that discount when it is finally applied.)
Also now available for pre-order on Amazon is John Guillermin’s King Kong (1975) in 4K Ultra HD Steelbook from Paramount. This is a title that’s been available for a couple of years in the UK from StudioCanal, but it’s finally coming to the US. The film stars Jessica Lange, Jeff Bridges, Charles Grodin, and René Auberjonois (of Star Trek: Deep Space Nine fame).
Click on the title links above to find their respective pre-order pages (and as always, whenever you order literally anything from Amazon after clicking to them through our links, you’re helping to support our work here at The Bits and we appreciate it).
Now then, the big announcement news today is that A24 is finally taking pre-orders for Jonathan Demme’s remastered Stop Making Sense (1984) in A24 Shop-exclusive Blu-ray and 4K Ultra HD Collector’s Editions. Both will include Dolby Atmos audio and the original stereo mix, plus extras (including a 25-minute documentary and 2 bonus tracks—Cities and Big Business/I Zimbra) as well as a 64-page booklet. The 4K will also include Dolby Vision HDR. The title is expected to ship in sometime in May. You can find the pre-order page here. We don’t yet know if there will be a wide-release version eventually, though one is certainly possible. [Read on here...]
- Back the Bits
- Support The Digital Bits via Patreon
- Bluray
- My Two Cents
- The Digital Bits
- Bill Hunt
- 4K Ultra HD
- Kino Lorber Studio Classics
- The Abyss 4K
- True Lies 4K
- Aliens 4K
- A24
- Jonathan Demme
- Stop Making Sense 4K Collector's Edition
- Tron: Legacy 4K
- Joseph Kosinski
- Happy Sad Confused Top Gun: Maverick commentary
- Kong Kong (1976) 4K
- Paramount
- The Manchurian Candidate (2004) 4K
- Changing Lanes 4K
- North Dallas Forty 4K
- Paint Your Wagon 4K
- Shout! Studios
- Shout! Factory
- Scream Factory
- GKids
- Lost in Space (1998) BD
- Winnie the Pooh: Blood and Honey BD
- Affliction BD
- Rolling Thunder 4K
- Blue Giant BD
- The Crow (1994) 4K
- Dariusz Wolski
- Alex Proyas
- The Poseidon Adventure (1972) 4K
Oblivion: From Concept to the Screen
What began as an idea in the Middle East transformed into a visual story on the big screen. Oblivion took shape inside the mind of director Joe Kosinski, leaped onto the pages of a graphic novel and ended up as a science-fiction movie with Tom Cruise.
THE BIRTH OF OBLIVION
“It came at a time where I was having trouble getting my foot in the door in the commercial music video business,” said Kosinski. Out of frustration, he wrote the story of a man digging into the past, our present, to find his humanity. “I had this idea of what would it be like to be the last man on Earth, to be kind of the one looking back at the world we know,” he said. […]